Title: Polymer Applications Understanding Polymer Activation
1Polymer ApplicationsUnderstanding Polymer
Activation
2Why Polymer?
Helping particles settle faster
Improving liquid/solid separation
3Some Applications
Clarifiers Primary Coagulation Plate Frame
Press Rotary Drum Thickener Belt Press Drying
Beds Gravity Belt Thickener Centrifuges Paper
Machines Mining Metal Processing Paint
Booths Enhanced Oil Recovery
4Settling Rates
Diameter of Particle, mm Order of Size Total Surface Area Time Required to Settle
10.0 1.0 0.1 0.01 0.001 0.0001 0.00001 0.000001 Gravel Coarse Sand Fine Sand Silt Bacteria Colloidal particles Colloidal particles Color particles 0.487 sq in 4.87 sq in 48.7 sq in 3.38 sq ft 33.8 sq ft 3.8 sq yd 0.7 acre 7.0 acre 0.3 sec 3.0 sec 38 sec 33 min 55 hr 230 days 6.3 yrs 63 yrs
5Inorganic Salts
Common Name Formula Equivalent weight pH at 1 Availability
Alum Al2(SO4) 3 14H2O 100 3 - 4 Lump 17.5 Al2O3 Liquid 8.5 Al2O3
Lime Ca(OH) 2 40 12 Lump as CaO Powder 93-95 Slurry 15-20
Ferric chloride FeCl3 6H2O 91 3 - 4 Lump 20 Fe Liquid 20 Fe
Ferric sulfate Fe2SO4 3H2O 51.5 3 - 4 Granular 18.5 Fe
Copperas FeSO4 7H2O 139 3 - 4 Granular 20 Fe
Sodium aluminate Na2Al2O4 100 11 - 12 Flake 46 Al2O3 Liquid 25 Al2O3
6Inorganic Salts
Advantages
Disadvantages
- pH dependent
- Typically higher dosage and increased sludge
volumes - No reduction of organic residuals
- Weak flocs
7Synthetic Organic Polymers
Advantages
- Strong Stable Floc
- Improved dewatering
- No additional sludge volume
- Effective over wide pH range
- Can reduce organic molecules
Disadvantages
- Slippery safety hazard
- Needs proper mixing activation
- Handling and proper application effects
performance
8Polymerization
Monomers Catalyst (Initiator)
Polymer
9Polymer Characteristics
- Coagulant
- Flocculant
- Molecular Weight
- Activity
- Charge Density
- Functional Group
- Charge
10Molecular Weight
Low - Coagulant
High - Flocculant
11Polymer Characteristics
- Coagulant
- Flocculant
- Molecular Weight
- Functional Group
- Activity
- Charge Density
- Charge
12Polyacrylamide
13Charge Density
14Polymer Charges
Non-ionic no charge Anionic
negative (-) charge Cationic positive
() charge
15Form
- Coagulant
- Mannich
- Emulsion/Dispersion
- Dry
16Forms Of Polymers
- Solution Polymers
- Primary coagulants
- 10 - 50 active
- Low molecular weight 5K - 200K
- Appearance - clear homogeneous liquid
- Package - Pails, Drums, Bins, Bulk
- Easy to dilute
- Neat product easy to pump
- Susceptible to Freeze
- Charge - cationic, anionic
17Forms Of Polymers
- MANNICH - Solution
- Flocculant
- 4- 6 active
- Low molecular weight segments 5K - 200K
- Appearance - clear to amber liquid
- Package - Bulk
- Can Freeze
- Viscous can be hard to pump
- Viscosity temperature dependent
- Fumes are unpleasant
- Charge - cationic only
18Forms Of Polymers
- Emulsions/Dispersions
- 25 - 55 active
- Appearance - white liquid
- Medium to High molecular weight 5M - 10M
- Appearance - clear homogeneous liquid
- Package - Pails, Drums, Bins, Bulk
- Neat product easy to pump but!!
- Needs Activation
- Susceptible to Freeze
- Will settle in neat form
- Charge - cationic, anionic, non-ionic
19Emulsion Polymers
Oil
Water
- Anionic, Cationic, Nonionic
- Flocculant
- 25 to 55 active
- Polymer gel size 0.1 to 5 µm
Polymer
20How Complex Is A Polymer Structure?
If MW is 10 million 350,000 molecules in a
gel One molecule has 150,000 monomers
2.5 microns 0.0001
21Emulsions/Dispersions
- They separate in storage!
Separated Oil Layer
Emulsion Polymer
Settled Out Polymer
22Forms Of Polymers
- Dry Polymers
- 90 - 95 active
- All molecular weights to 20M
- Appearance - powder, pellets, granules, beads
- Package - bags, bulk bags
- Must be wetted
- Dusting is safety concern
- Shelf life in years
- Charge - cationic, anionic, non-ionic
23Polymers (Polyelectroylytes)
- How they work
- How we characterize them
- How to make them work
24Coagulation
25Coagulation
- Charge Neutralization
- Double Layer Compression
- Enmeshment
26Coagulation
Charge Neutralization
27Charge Neutralization
28Coagulation Flocculation
29Flocculation
Bridging
30Overfeed Restabilization
31Methods Of Preparation / Activation
- In-Line Activation
- Batch Tank
32Preparation / Activation
- Moment Of Initial Wetting
- Agglomeration / Fragility
- Rate Of Hydration
- Charge Site Exposure
33Rate Of Hydration (The Science)
With good dispersion at Moment of Initial
Wetting a 1 micron radii polymer particle can
fully hydrate in 1 minute
swells 6-7 times
34Rate Of Hydration (Reality)
Without good dispersion agglomerations are
formed 10 micron agglomeration will fully
hydrate in ___ min(s)
35Rate Of Hydration (Attempt to Correct)
Without good dispersion agglomerations are
formed 10 micron agglomeration will fully
hydrate in 100 min(s)
Time increases by the square of the increase in
the radius (10 squared)
36The Art of Aging
- Aging is a Solution to a Problem It is not a
method or the goal of polymer activation - Aging is always required of all improperly mixed
polymer solutions - Aging is an attempt to gain total polymer
activation - Too much aging is detrimental to a properly mixed
polymer
37Effective Polymer Preparation
- The most important factor determining the proper
activation of polymer is proper application of
energy. - The energy needs to be adjustable to suit the
polymer selection and process application. -
38Characteristics of Polymer Dissolution
Fragility
Agglomeration
time
39Polymer Backbone Carbon-Carbon Bonds
40How Fragile is It?
- One gram of free falling water will rupture
- 1 million carbon-carbon bonds.
- Proper application of energy is critical
41Uniformity Of Mixing Energy
42Uniform Energy
43Uniform Energy
As the tank is made smaller the energy becomes
uniform
44Characteristics of Polymer Dissolution
Fragility
Agglomeration
time
45Mixing Zones
1
3000
46Staged Energy
A uniform but decreasing energy dissipation can
be created with various mixing zones.
Zone 3
Zone 2
Zone 1
47ProMinent Mixing Chamber Energy Profile
Zone 1
Fragility
Zone 2
Zone 3
Agglomeration
time
48Right Energy / Right Time
ENERGY
- TOO MUCH
- Damage The Chain
- Decreased Performance
- NOT ENOUGH
- Agglomerations
- Waste Polymer
- Decreased Performance
49Mixing, Mixing, Mixing
- Good Mixing
- Better Control
- Optimization
- Chemical Savings
50Charge Site Exposure
51Polymer Activation Factors
- High TDS makeup water
- Low temperature makeup water
- High molecular weight polymer
- Low charge density
- High or low surfactant
- With anionics, low pH and/or high hardness (ideal
7-9) - With cationics, high pH makeup water (ideal 6-8)
- Chlorine levels
52Other Factors Influencing Optimization
- Discharge Piping
- Minimize Fluid Velocity
- Eliminate High Shear Pumping Systems
- Multiple Points Of Injection
- Evaluate System Piping Downstream Of Polymer
Injection - Determine Optimal Feed Concentrations
53Conclusions
- Survey your system needs for improvement
- Evaluate costs for improvement vs. savings as
result of the improvement - Be aware of new technologies strategies that
will help you be more efficient
54Sizing ProMix S-Series
- Fill in the values
- Value A ______ Desired polymer feed rate in PPM
- Value B ______ Gallons per hour of water to be
treated - Value C ______ Desired solution of polymer feed
solution - Value D ______ Weight per gallon of neat
chemical
Value A
Value B
lbs per hour of neat product
X
120
1000
lbs per hour of neat product
gallons per hour of neat product
Value D
55Sizing ProMix S-Series
- Take the value of gallons per hour of neat
polymer product and match within the ranges in
table TWO
Pump Ranges
0.15 0.3 0.7 1.0 3.0
0-0.15 0-0.3 0-0.79 0-1.5 0-3.5
56Sizing ProMix S-Series
- Determine the volume of dilution water required
GPH of dilution water required
X 100
57Sizing ProMix S-Series
- Select the next highest number in table ONE for
dilution water in GPH
Water in GPH Table One
30 60 120 240 300 600
30 60x2 60x2 or 120x2 120x2 300x2 300x2
Model -----ProMix S
_________ Table one
_________ Table two
-
58Sizing ProMix S-Series
- Yes folks its that easy to pick generic sized
unit
1
120x2